Breast Health Information

Early detection and immediate treatment offer the best chance of surviving breast cancer: When breast cancer is confined to the breast, the five-year survival rate is over 95%. Now is the time to be proactive and take charge of your breast health!

Start with this three-step early detection plan as recommended by the American Cancer Society:

Do a monthly breast self-exam beginning at age 20.

Visit a trained medical professional at least every three years beginning at age 20 and annually after 40 for clinical breast exams.

Beginning at age 40, get an annual screening mammography. Women under the age of 40 with either a family history of breast cancer or at high risk should consult with a medical professional regarding when to begin getting mammograms.

BREAST CANCER FACTS AND STATISTICS

Chance that a woman will develop breast cancer in her lifetime

12.5%

Breast cancer cases that do not invovle inherited genes

90%

Reduced risk of breast cancer fatality by undergoing mammography

20%

Early stage breast cancers treated by partial mastectomy or lumpectomy

What Others Are Saying

A year after Ellen Eddings discovered she had breast cancer in her right breast, after 33 rounds of chemotherapy and radiation at the University of Chicago Medical Center, an irregularity was discovered in her left breast. “I had a bilateral mastectomy in February of 2003," Ellen said. "I thought, why... Read More

A year after Ellen Eddings discovered she had breast cancer in her right breast, after 33 rounds of chemotherapy and radiation at the University of Chicago Medical Center, an irregularity was discovered in her left breast.

“I had a bilateral mastectomy in February of 2003,” Ellen said. “I thought, why me?” Her bilateral reconstruction failed on the right side, and after three surgeries she was at a low point. But a special nurse helped her through the worst of her ordeal, and her four sisters, all from Arkansas, traveled to Chicago to welcome her home from the hospital.

For the next nine years, Ellen made do with off-the-shelf breast forms. She hid behind loose tops, heavy jackets and scarves. “I had to apply the nipples separately and there was often a problem with slippage,” she said. “My breasts looked uneven, and I thought people were noticing.”

The chair of the Curriculum and Instruction Division of the School of Education at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff learned about ContourMed customized breast forms in early 2012. “I called and immediately set up an appointment for a scan at the ContourMed office,” Ellen said. “They were very customer-service focused and set up the scan around my schedule. Within a few weeks of my appointment, I had my ContourMed breast forms. I am totally in love with them – I just put them on and go.”

Ellen’s thousand-watt smile beams when she talks about her life today. She plays racquetball and shoots hoops with her younger son when he’s home from college. She even wore her ContourMed breast forms during a bath at a Hot Springs spa.

“I feel like myself again. I feel attractive,” Ellen said. “One of my students told me, ‘Something about you is different…you look brighter.’”